TY - JOUR
T1 - Self-Enhancement Mentality or Cognitive Preferences? Unpacking Different Approaches to Understanding Cultural Variations in Attribution Patterns
AU - Zhang, Congcong
AU - Yuan, Connie Y.
AU - Wei, Lu
AU - Jung, Joo Young
AU - Qiu, Jack Linchuan
AU - Hwang, Seongbin
AU - Song, Céline Yunya
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 SAGE Publications.
PY - 2025/1/10
Y1 - 2025/1/10
N2 - Existing studies showed inconsistent results about whether and how attribution patterns differ across cultures. We reviewed three different theoretical approaches in this study: the relative self-enhancement approach, the universal self-enhancement approach and the cognition approach, and found that each theoretical approach has received empirical support and informed competing hypotheses. Hence, the main goal of this study is to investigate the three theoretical approaches simultaneously using experimental data and explore how these approaches explain attribution behavior across cultures in a qualitatively different manner. In Study 1, we recruited participants from the U.S., mainland China and Hong Kong of China for an online experiment. In Study 2, we recruited participants from the U.S., mainland China, Singapore and Japan, and introduced alternative measures to assess attribution behavior. Results suggested that: a) attribution behavior can be influenced by both self-enhancing motives and cognitive processes, along with measurement instruments. Specifically, the cognition approach was supported when attribution was assessed with Likert scales. In contrast, when attribution was measured by rank-order questions, the relative self-enhancement approach was supported; and b) attribution decisions diverged within East Asian countries but converged between some Eastern cultures (e.g., mainland China and Singapore) and the West. Our results showed that acknowledging the idiosyncrasy of each cultural group and investigating each group as a separate cultural unit are necessary and important for theoretical development in attribution. Future directions and implications were also discussed.
AB - Existing studies showed inconsistent results about whether and how attribution patterns differ across cultures. We reviewed three different theoretical approaches in this study: the relative self-enhancement approach, the universal self-enhancement approach and the cognition approach, and found that each theoretical approach has received empirical support and informed competing hypotheses. Hence, the main goal of this study is to investigate the three theoretical approaches simultaneously using experimental data and explore how these approaches explain attribution behavior across cultures in a qualitatively different manner. In Study 1, we recruited participants from the U.S., mainland China and Hong Kong of China for an online experiment. In Study 2, we recruited participants from the U.S., mainland China, Singapore and Japan, and introduced alternative measures to assess attribution behavior. Results suggested that: a) attribution behavior can be influenced by both self-enhancing motives and cognitive processes, along with measurement instruments. Specifically, the cognition approach was supported when attribution was assessed with Likert scales. In contrast, when attribution was measured by rank-order questions, the relative self-enhancement approach was supported; and b) attribution decisions diverged within East Asian countries but converged between some Eastern cultures (e.g., mainland China and Singapore) and the West. Our results showed that acknowledging the idiosyncrasy of each cultural group and investigating each group as a separate cultural unit are necessary and important for theoretical development in attribution. Future directions and implications were also discussed.
KW - attribution decision
KW - cognition
KW - cross-cultural difference
KW - self-enhancement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85215108322&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/10693971241309964
U2 - 10.1177/10693971241309964
DO - 10.1177/10693971241309964
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85215108322
SN - 1069-3971
JO - Cross-Cultural Research
JF - Cross-Cultural Research
ER -